Morning light.
Yosemite Falls in the far distance
Yosemite Falls up close!
Lower Yosemite Falls
Hiking into the sunset.
Sentinel Bridge View
Golden hour
The beach below the bridge
Bridge
Black bear
Ducklings
Fall foliage along the loop
Bobcat near the Meadows
Sunset from boardwalk
Julia H.
Feb 7, 2022
We took the Sentinel Meadow/Cook's Meadow Loop on our second day since it was an easier hike (~2 miles). We drove around the Yosemite Valley area too: stopping by the Tunnel View of El Capitan & bottom view, Happy Isles Bridge near the Half Dome, Bridalveil Falls, and view of the Yosemite Valley. This Sentinel Meadow/Cook's Meadow Loop isn't "marked," but there is a path for you to walk. During winter/off-season, some areas on the path have black ice, so be careful. This loop gives you different vantage point of Yosemite Falls (Upper & Lower), takes you through the old Yosemite Village (last standing building is the Chapel), and decent views of all the granite rock mountains. We also took the Lower Yosemite Falls trail to get a closer look at the waterfall. It's an easy trail that isn't too long. Restrooms are available near the Yosemite Lodge/Lower Yosemite Falls trail.
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Tracy L.
Jul 4, 2020
We arrived into the park on a Thursday at about 7:30am and parked at the lot in front of Swinging Bridge to do this loop (with Lower Yosemite Falls added one easily). Since park access is restricted because of COVID-19, there were plenty of parking spaces for us. This is a very easy hike - I'd label it more of a causal walk. A lot of this trail is shaded, only the portion between Sentinel Bridge on Southside Drive back to to Swinging Bridge parking lot was very exposed and sunny/hot. This walk is great because you get to see a lot of things - Swinging Bridge, Cook's Meadow, Yosemite Falls, Sentinel Bridge, the chapel, Merced River, and views of all the granite giants like Half Dome. We took our time, and Including the Lower Yosemite Falls Trail, it took us about 1 hour and 45 minutes.Along the wood boardwalk (which we had to ourselves), my husband spied a bear casually walking along the meadow. My son found some baby ducklings in a pond just off the Merced River too.
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Sandeep R.
Oct 14, 2021
Cook's Meadow Loop Trail is a 2.3 mile heavily trafficked loop trail located near Yosemite Valley, California that features beautiful wild flowers and is good for all skill levels. It's a flat, easy hike that takes you around and through a pair of meadows and includes multiple views of Yosemite Falls and Half Dome.This is a great intro-to-Yosemite hike, especially if you've just arrived at Yosemite and are starting your trip. This short, easy walk offers stunning views of Yosemite Falls, Half Dome, Glacier Point, and Sentinel Rock. The Cook's Meadow Trail is open year-round and is a great spot to visit no matter when you come to Yosemite as you are always rewarded with a great view. In winter, the path may be snow-covered or icy.
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Robert C.
Feb 12, 2016
Would you pay $35 to see a former land fill? Millions of visitors do just that!Visitors pay a $35 entrance fee when driving into Yosemite National Park, and will first see Yosemite Falls, at 2425' the tallest in North America, just as they drive around Cook Meadows. Cook Meadows is one of the few meadows at 4000' elevation. It is located at the very end of Yosemite Valley, with Glacier Point on one side, Yosemite Lodge at the Falls on another side, and Yosemite Village on a third side.There is a second prominent meadow in Yosemite, in the northern section. It no longer exists, as the meadow was dammed up in the early 1900s and now lies beneath 50 feet of water of the Hetch Hetchy reservoir, source of drinking water for much of the Bay Area. When the valley was settled by white men in the late 1800s, they built a town on Cook meadows, with Ford model T s parked diagonally next to stores alongside the dirt road. Later they moved the town over to the edge of the valley, and used Cook Meadows as a land fill. Eventually Cook Meadows became a campground for tourists in the 20th century.The area was trampled over quite a bit, as there were no trails built until much later. In the 1997-1998 El Nino year, the Yosemite Valley and Cook Meadows were flooded by the overflowing Merced river. Afterwards, the Meadows was dug up, and the garbage from the landfill removed, so that the Meadows would have a natural drainage for rising waters. Camping was banned, wooden boardwalks added, and the Meadows restored to its former luster.We walk from our hotel at the Ahwahnee, through Yosemite Village, to Yosemite Falls, around the edge of the Meadows. We continue walking through Yosemite Lodge at the Falls, the primary lodge in the park, and around the backside of the Lodge, which border on the meadow.Hiding in the bushes in the early morning is an adult stag deer, with an impressive set of antlers. During the winter these deer will shed their antlers to conserve energy, and grow a new set in the summer. We continue walking on asphalt trails, with small fences on both sides, to keep people from wandering off onto the yet to be fully restored areas of the meadows. We reach Swinging Bridge, a wooden pedestrian bridge, over the Merced River, with Yosemite Falls towering in the background.As we walk alongside the Valley Loop road, we see a coyote hunting for squirrels in the brush of the meadows. A bus slows down to allow the tourists to click away on their cameras. The wife and I walk slowly along side the road, checking out the coyote 100 feet away.Deer are very common, coyotes less common, black bears mainly seen at dusk and at night, and bobcats rare, and mountain lions all but gone from the meadows. Grizzly bears are extinct in California, but can be seen in Wyoming, Montana and Alaska. We walk back to our hotel, with the walk completely around the meadows taking some 3 hours. That evening, while still dusk, we do see a bobcat, catching a squirrel for dinner. Sorry, but that's not on my dinner plate tonight!
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Yonnie C.
Oct 7, 2020
Stopped by here today while at Yosemite. First time taking the toddler, so it was fun. Barely any water in the stream and lots of smoke still lingering from the Creek Fire that's impacting Mariposa County. We didn't see any deer this time but saw plenty of deer in the pastures nearby in all previous times.
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Lara W.
Nov 6, 2020
This is an awesome/easy little loop on the valley floor that I'd recommend for those with kids wanting to view the rock formations as well as the foliage. Go at dusk to see the deer come out and feed. We saw a bear too!
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Laura R.
Jan 7, 2015
This is a really easy trail loop spanning about 1 mile, with flat terrain and stunning views. You can see Yosemite Falls, Half Dome, Glacier Point, and Sentinel Rock all in this little short loop. In fact, I passed it while leaving and entering the park (going towards the Upper Pines Campground), and almost drove right by it. You'll see side/street parking all along both side of the road, and a wide, flat meadow with a bridge winding through it, and that's when you know you're at Cook's Meadow.If you're taking the shuttle in, you can access it from shuttle stop #5, #9 (these two are across the street from each other) the easiest. It is bike and pet accessible, as well as wheelchair accessible, so you can keep that in consideration. But really it's a hike that will take you (at most) 30 minutes, and yet offer some beautiful views. I think it's a great introduction to the park when you enter, or even a great goodbye upon exiting.I went in the morning in late November, after I had checked out from my camp, when the dew had frozen over the meadow and it was just GORGEOUS. The views you can get, even on that tiny bridge were lovely... The sun slowly peeking out behind the mountains and catching the frozen dew, spinning silver colors around, trees ribbed in fall colors. Short, and so worth the trek through. I imagine it's also pretty spectacular in summer, when the meadow has tons of blossoms and blue sky.
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Allie A.
Dec 15, 2015
We were really bad tourists. We basically had very limited time in Yosemite, so we just hopped off the shuttle bus, did a lot of oohing and aching and taking pictures of the beautiful landscape and walking around trails we lucked into. We came in the middle of winter in-between major blizzards, so a lot of things were hidden under snow. Yet we appreciated the fact that the trails are built to help protect the fragile environment and let the meadow begin to restore itself with the help of the national park.
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Kristin M.
Jun 8, 2016
Cook's meadow the former location of many of the buildings when Yosemite was a growing town. Now the park service is working to restore the meadow. It's really important for visitors to stay on the pathways to avoid crushing the plants. Of course there are always idiots who break the rules. This is the perfect spot to come in the morning or at dusk if you're looking to spot deer.
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Maegan O.
May 20, 2024
great views and very peaceful relaxing atmosphere and there are benches every few miles. perfect to stop at for a snack!
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